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Hackinars in Bioinformatics
Unix basics and usage of Computerome Erland Hochheim DTU Systems Biology Center for Biological Sequence Analysis
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Log on the Danish National Life Sciences Supercomputer – aka
Log on the Danish National Life Sciences Supercomputer – aka. Computerome Prerequisites Some sort of personal computer SSH client Linux and Mac have built-in terminal programs which support SSH Terminal, Xterm, etc. Windows does not… PuTTY is a good choice for most people MobaXterm is widely used, but 2-factor authentication can be a bit tricky How to do Use User-ID and Password provided from DTU Login to homesystem$ ssh ~]$
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Login to Computerome
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Be familiar with the strengths and weaknesses of each computer including their own laptop.
Easy to carry Provides access to resources elsewhere Computerome 500+ nodes, cores 3PB available storage Somewhat difficult to carry Provides massive resources from (almost) everywhere
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Exercise: Open terminal and login to Computerome
Find the terminal program on your computer Linux and Mac should be built-in Windows might want to download PuTTY Login to Computerome
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Basic Linux/UNIX commands
Manual pages: man Help flag: --help, -h List files and directories: ls List, long form: ls -l List all: ls -a Change directory: cd Move files and directories: mv Copy file and directories: cp Copy recursively: cp -r Copy, and protect permissions: cp -p Remove files: rm Remove recursively: rm -r Force remove: rm -f Create directory: mkdir Create structure directory with parents: mkdir -p
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man command – example ‘man ls’
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--help flag
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ls
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cd, cp, mv, rm
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Exercise: Experiment with commands
‘man ls’ - see what ls command can do Try some different flags to ls: ls -l ls -a others… Change directory: cd Get help on mv command mv --help mv -h Copy file and directories: cp Copy recursively: cp -r Copy, and protect permissions: cp -p Remove files: rm Remove recursively: rm -r Force remove: rm -f Create directory: mkdir Create structure directory with parents: mkdir -p
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Commands for viewing files
Concatenate files: cat Output first part of file: head Output last part of file: tail View contents of file: more “Opposite of more”: less
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Viewing - cat
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Viewing - head, tail
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Viewing - more, less, example ‘less outfile’
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Pipes and redirects | Pipe, example: date | awk '{print $3,$2,$6}'
> [FILE] Overwrite file, example: echo Hello World > hello.txt >> [FILE] Append to file, example: echo Hello CBS >> hello.txt
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Pipes and redirects - |, >, >>
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Editors on Linux/UNIX machines
vi and vim Programmers text editors nedit NEdit is a standard GUI (Graphical User Interface) style text editor gedit Graphical text editor for Gnome
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Editors
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Editing - vim hello.txt
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<use awk/nawk/gawk, sed, sort, count for formatting of text>
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Basic file analysis Report lines, words and bytes: wc
Sort contents: sort
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Basic analysis - wc
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Basic analysis - sort
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File and directory permissions
ls –l to see permissions on files drwxrwxr-x 3 erhh erhh Mar 12 09:00 course -rw erhh erhh Mar 10 12:48 course/STDIN.o3929 -rw-rw-r-- 1 erhh erhh Mar 10 12:55 course/tmpdir/Graph ugo User Group Owner rwx Read Write eXecute Change owner: chown Change group: chgrp Change permissions: chmod
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Permissions and their consequences
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File transfer between computers
Create a portable archive: tar Secure copy: scp Get stuff from the Web wget curl
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Transfer - tar, scp
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Transfer - wget, curl
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<Knowing about good coding practices (Leon’s 3papers)>
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Computerome Wiki Main information source for all things Computerome A living document Corrections to be mailed to Special page for Tips and Tricks
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Module environment module avail module load module initadd
Reference:
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module avail, module load, module initadd
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Running jobs on Computerome
Jobs are run in a Batch environment Moab scheduler Torque resource manager Reference:
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Job submission qsub msub xqsub xmsub
Reference:
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Monitoring jobs qstat showq checkjob pestat
Reference:
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Simple job submission with qsub
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Monitoring - watch showq
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Monitoring - showq -c
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Monitoring - qstat
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Monitoring - checkjob
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Monitoring - pestat
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Job control canceljob showstart tracejob
Reference:
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Job control – canceljob, showstart
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Job control - tracejob
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Job control – checkjob –v –v
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Exercise with Velvet Login to Computerome
Go to your subdirectory in hackinars project directory /home/projects/pr_hackinars/people/<userdir> Copy data/Strain_H fastq to you own directory $ cp /home/projects/pr_hackinars/data/Strain_H fastq .
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Exercise with Velvet – cont.
Create a basic jobfile (script) $ vi velvet.sh #!/bin/bash velveth tmpdir 21 -fastq Strain_H fastq velvetg tmpdir Make it executable $ chmod +x velvet.sh
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Exercise with Velvet – cont.
Load modules $ module load tools $ module load moab torque $ module load velvet/1.2.10 Run velvet job using xmsub $ xmsub -W group_list=pr_hackinars -A pr_hackinars \ > -l nodes=1:ppn=2,mem=100m,walltime=3600 \ > -V -d $PWD -ro outfile -re errorfile -de ./velvet.sh Watch job $ showq -u <userid> or watch showq -u <userid> $ qstat -u <userid> or watch qstat -u <userid> $ checkjob <jobid> $ tracejob <jobid> $ cat outfile $ cat errorfile $ cat tmpdir/Log
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Exercise with Velvet – cont.
Extend existing jobfile (script) $ vi velvet.sh #!/bin/sh ### Account information #PBS -W group_list=pr_hackinars -A pr_hackinars ### Job name #PBS -N velvet_test ### Output files #PBS -e errorfile #PBS -o outfile ### Number of nodes #PBS -l nodes=1:ppn=2 ### Memory #PBS -l mem=100m ### Requesting time (format dd:hh:mm:ss or just number of seconds) #PBS -l walltime=1:00:00 ### Script goes below here # Go to the directory from where the job was submitted (initial directory is $HOME) echo Working directory is $PBS_O_WORKDIR cd $PBS_O_WORKDIR module load tools module load velvet/ velveth tmpdir 21 -fastq Strain_H fastq velvetg tmpdir Run job $ qsub ./velvet.sh
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BONUS: Estimating number of cores
gzip gunzip gzip PERL Script gzip
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